Austin American-Statesman

Many lives still in limbo a month after hurricane,

1,300 living in shelters and debris piled up one month after hurricane.

- By Juan A. Lozano

It has been a month HOUSTON — since Hurricane Harvey brought devastatin­g wind and flooding to the Texas coast and Houston area, and though the water has receded and businesses have reopened, huge debris piles in front of thousands of homes serve as a constant reminder that there’s still a long way to go in the recovery process.

Chris Slaughter, 39, whose house in the Houston suburb of Kingwood was flooded by 5½ feet of water, said he hasn’t let his family see their home as it undergoes repairs because he doesn’t want his children “seeing their memories piled up in 5 feet stacks in the front yard.”

Troy Randle, one of the more than 1,300 people still living in shelters, said his life remains on hold as he waits for the federal government to process his request for help so he can find more permanent housing.

More than 60,000 displaced people are still living in hotel rooms paid for by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, and many businesses say they expect revenue will continue to suffer over the next six months. But people remain hopeful that they will rebuild and find their way back to normal. “Harvey knocked us to our

knees,” said Aransas County-Judge Burt Mills Jr., whose coastal county

saw 35 percent of its buildings destroyed after Harvey made landfall as a Category 4 hurricane Aug. 25. “The next day we got on our feet, and every day it gets a little better.”

In Houston, where thousands of people needed rescuing during the storm, traffic is again flowing, and kids have returned to school. But there are piles of ruined furniture and other debris in front of homes in the worsthit areas that serve as a continuing reminder of Harvey’s wrath.

The storm is estimated to have damaged or destroyed more than 176,100 homes in Texas. In Harris County, which includes Houston, officials say at least 136,000 homes and other structures were damaged.

“Until we get back to normal life, then I think this event is just going to continue to be a sore wound on the whole county,” Harris County Judge Ed Emmett said.

Officials estimate that Harvey could produce 200 million to 300 million cubic yards of debris in Texas — double or triple the estimated 100 million cubic yards that Hurricane Katrina left behind in all states it hit.

Marcela Magaña, whose home in suburban Houston in Fort Bend County flooded, said seeing the debris every day is “very overwhelmi­ng” for her and her husband, Eli. Like everyone else in their situation, they wonder when it will be picked up.

Public officials are asking for patience, saying it will probably take months.

The two large shelters in Houston have closed, including one at the convention center that held 10,000 people.

But several smaller shelters remain open in the Houston area and other Southeast Texas cities, and for those still living in them, the frustratio­n is mounting.

“I don’t feel like I’m accelerati­ng at no point. I feel like I’m stagnant,” said Randle, 44.

He is staying at a Houston shelter opened at a shuttered Macy’s store. “I need housing,” he said. More than 834,800 people in Texas have registered for FEMA assistance, and more than 298,000 have been approved so far.

“A lot of people ... are going to be wiped out financiall­y,” Eli Magaña said. “People are trying to remain hopeful to see if they can get ... help.”

One-third of the nearly 400 Texas business executives surveyed in September by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas said they expect losses from Harvey to continue over the next six months.

Mills said he remains focused on quickly cleaning up and rebuilding because the economies of many Aransas County cities depend on tourism, and without hotels and restaurant­s, “we’re sunk.”

Becky Ames, the mayor in Beaumont, which had 2,000 flooded households, said that her city’s recovery is going well and that it is now focused on being a “good neighbor” and helping surroundin­g smaller cities hit hard by Harvey that have fewer resources.

 ?? MATT ROURKE / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Flood-damaged debris lines a Houston street Sept. 7 in the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey. One month after Harvey dumped record rainfall in the area, the larger shelters have closed and much of the city has gone back to normal, but huge piles of debris...
MATT ROURKE / ASSOCIATED PRESS Flood-damaged debris lines a Houston street Sept. 7 in the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey. One month after Harvey dumped record rainfall in the area, the larger shelters have closed and much of the city has gone back to normal, but huge piles of debris...
 ?? JUAN LOZANO / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Chris Slaughter talks about having to rip out everything on the ground floor of his home in Kingwood. The home was flooded by 51/2 feet of water during Harvey’s torrential rainfall.
JUAN LOZANO / ASSOCIATED PRESS Chris Slaughter talks about having to rip out everything on the ground floor of his home in Kingwood. The home was flooded by 51/2 feet of water during Harvey’s torrential rainfall.

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